No reaction between them
copper sulphate and carbon dioxide
When copper carbonate is mixed with hydrochloric acid, a chemical reaction occurs which produces copper chloride, carbon dioxide gas, and water. The copper carbonate will dissolve and react with the hydrochloric acid to form a blue-green solution. The carbon dioxide gas bubbles out of the solution, creating fizzing or effervescence.
They will react to form aqueous sodium chloride and solid copper carbonate in a double replacement reaction, also known as a double displacement reaction. CuCl2(aq) + Na2CO3(aq) --> CuCO3(s) + 2NaCl(aq)
i dont konw..:P nice answer rite?? hehe lol
Yea
You can separate sand and copper carbonate by using a process called filtration. First, mix the sand and copper carbonate in water to form a mixture. Then, pour the mixture through a filter paper in a funnel. The sand will be trapped on the filter paper while the copper carbonate will pass through as a liquid.
Most probably copper chloride and carbon dioxide, if the concentration of hydrochloric acid is high enough.
Copper and carbon along with oxygen make up copper(II) carbonate. However you cannot make it simply by mixing them together. A possible pathway might be to get to sodium carbonate perhaps CO2 + NaOH might be the way and then make some copper sulfate by reacting it with H2SO4, mix your sodium carbonate solution with copper sulfate solution and copper carbonate should precipitate out.
chalky white precipitate
After awhile the silver will turn into copper because silver is originated from copper
iron sulphate will be created
You'll get a solution of sodium carbonate in water. People who work in photo labs do this all the time.